Bring a camera... and please put
it on a tripod so we don't get the typical Bigfoot and UFO blurry pics... PLEASE!
Mounting the scene on the wall and the camera
on a tripod so that the center of the camera lense is trained right on the center of the scene should do the trick, and you'll seem like a expert.
Mounting the situation on the wall and the camera
on a tripod so which the center of the camera lense is trained right on the center of the situation should do the trick, and you'll seem like a professional.
Mounting the scene on the wall and the camera
on a tripod so which the center of the camera lense is trained right on the center of the scene should do the trick, and you'll seem like a professional.
Try to film
on a tripod so that the image is not shaky.
Not exact matches
They were 6 s and 3.6 s exposure times respectively, which I could do
so easily
on a
tripod.
Usually I am alone when I am baking
so I just put the camera
on a
tripod.
But the
tripod model puts the pieces in context without isolating them from each other, since each reinforces the other: online outreach sends people to the website, where they're captured
on an email list, which in turn keeps them involved in online outreach, and
so on.
okay
so I bought a
tripod and tried it out before but my camera would never focus
on me, just the background — is there a trick to it?
I'm not very good at posing, I find it
so much easier to find a quiet place, only shoot with someone you're comfortable in front of (or even
on a
tripod / remote!)
So on a sunny saturday afternoon we teamed up and headed with a tripod to one of my favorite locations and shot our looks — so so happy with the end resul
So on a sunny saturday afternoon we teamed up and headed with a
tripod to one of my favorite locations and shot our looks —
so so happy with the end resul
so so happy with the end resul
so happy with the end result!
Those pics are
so beautiful, lucky you to have a photographer, i have to rely
on my
tripod and remote Love the backdrop, the water and all Love your lace top Sue
So, if you don't have a friend you could ask, you can do it
on your own with your camera and a
tripod.
And I was panicking that I posted no outfit post last week and I didn't want to repeat that this week,
so... I got up at the crackadawn
on Saturday and me and the
tripod went down to a little nearby beach (where I hoped I'd have no witnesses!)
So, after spending $ 5
on the
tripod, $ 10
on the light kit and $ 25
on the lamp shade, my Restoration Hardware look - alike lamp cost me $ 40 instead of $ 1200!!
Blogging and illustrating also keep Rachel very busy, she says she recently bought herself a
tripod, «
So I wouldn't have to rely
on anyone else to take my pictures.»
So I balanced my
tripod on the hill and hoped people wouldn't look at me too funny as they drove by.
Not that anyone could have made much with such a talky script, and directing
so static, a camera might as well have been mounted
on a
tripod by Pacino to shoot most of the scenes.
So we set up cameras
on tripods all over his house and in his shop and encouraged him to videotape himself.
So too, the image produced when the
tripod is set back
on the ground is a still - life, a naturalistic study of the iconography of abstract expressionism.
The second (and good solution) is to set your camera up
on a
tripod and use a long exposure time
so that the fireworks burst at some point during it.
On the top can be found a speaker grill, which comes in handy for two - way audio and for sounding an alarm, while on the bottom you'll find a screw - hole for mounting the camera to a tripod or another type of bass, if you so choos
On the top can be found a speaker grill, which comes in handy for two - way audio and for sounding an alarm, while
on the bottom you'll find a screw - hole for mounting the camera to a tripod or another type of bass, if you so choos
on the bottom you'll find a screw - hole for mounting the camera to a
tripod or another type of bass, if you
so choose.
The camera is also capable of light painting,
so you can leave the camera
on a
tripod for a few seconds to let it capture all the light, resulting in some creative shots.
Make sure your camera will connect to your
tripod — that hole
on the bottom of your camera screws onto your
tripod in most cases,
so be sure it fits.
Use a
tripod so you can play with different exposures while maintaining the same angle
on each shot.
So the photographer took the picture usin a
tripod of just one dog in the chair and then got the other dog to sit
on the floor next to it and he spliced the two pictures together,
on top of each other like a vector.